Showing posts with label UK military. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK military. Show all posts

Friday, November 27, 2015

Wheelchair Bound UK Veteran Left Homeless

War veteran Chris Lazzara homeless for Christmas after Army gave notice from Howe Barracks 
Kent Online
by Chris Pragnell
27 November 2015
A crippled war veteran is being ordered by top brass to clear out of Army digs just days before Christmas.

Former Private Chris Lazzara has been told to pack his bags – and slapped with a court summons for December 16.

Refusal could see Mr Lazzara, his wife and baby son turfed out of their house in Howe Barracks and left homeless over the festive period.

Mr Lazzara, who served his country in Afghanistan, said: “I feel like the Army has declared war on me."

“I feel really let down. I just can’t believe the timing of this. All we need is time to stay in the property while we acquire other accommodation.

“We’ve nowhere to go so I don’t know what we’re expected to do? I’m now trying to sort emergency accommodation through the council but we’ve no guarantees at all.”

Canterbury’s Howe Barracks site will eventually be bulldozed, but while most properties sit empty, some occupants are still in place.

Mr Lazzara, 32, is confined to a wheelchair following injuries he says he sustained during an Army exercise.

He says Army bosses are refusing compensation, claiming his injuries are the result of an earlier condition, and have launched eviction proceedings.

Having served with the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, Mr Lazzara was discharged on medical grounds in July this year.
read more here

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Price Harry Feels Responsible for Veterans Because He is One

It has been said that if leaders had to go to war, wars would come to an end.
January 10, 1946
“I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its stupidity.”
General Dwight D. Eisenhower Speech in Ottawa
Prince Harry, Michelle Obama honor wounded veterans 
The British royal said he first felt a responsibility to help veterans following his first tour of Afghanistan.
UPI
By Annie Martin
Oct. 28, 2015
"It hit me then that this flight was one of many, carrying home men and women whose lives would be changed forever, and some who had made the ultimate sacrifice. From that moment, I knew I had a responsibility to help all veterans, who had made huge personal sacrifices for their countries, to lead healthy and dignified lives after service." Prince Harry
FORT BELVOIR, Va., Oct. 28 (UPI) -- Prince Harry and first lady Michelle Obama honored wounded veterans Wednesday in Fort Belvoir, Va.

The 31-year-old British royal and 51-year-old American advocate visited injured servicemen and women with Jill Biden, professor and wife to vice president Joe Biden.

Prince Harry arrived in the U.S. earlier in the day to promote the upcoming Invictus Games.

The event sees wounded armed services personnel partake in multiple athletic challenges, and will be held May 8-12, 2016, outside Orlando, Fla. read more here

Monday, October 19, 2015

UK: Friendly Fire Cost Soldier Leg in Iraq, Accused Got More in Disability Payments?

What an insult! Soldier who lost his leg in 'friendly fire' is paid £50,000 but the officer accused of shooting him gets £500,000 for the 'stress' of the inquiry
Daily Mail
By MARK NICOL DEFENCE CORRESPONDENT FOR THE MAIL
17 October 2015
CSgt Albert Thomson had his leg torn apart by 15 rounds on patrol in Iraq
Had his leg amputated in the field and was later awarded £50,000 by Army
Captain Thomas Henderson who shot him said machine gun was to blame
He was blamed then won an appeal and was awarded £500,000 for stress
Labour's Shadow Defence Minister Kevan Jones said it was an 'injustice'
Colour Sergeant Albert Thomson’s life was devastated when his left leg was torn apart by 15 machine-gun rounds fired at close range while he was on patrol in southern Iraq. He received a one-off payment of £50,000 for losing a lower limb, in line with Army tariffs for frontline injuries
A British Army officer accused of shooting another soldier in a friendly-fire incident has been secretly paid £500,000 in compensation for stress – ten times the sum received by his comrade whose leg was amputated after the tragic accident.

Colour Sergeant Albert Thomson’s life was devastated when his left leg was torn apart by 15 machine-gun rounds fired at close range while he was on patrol in southern Iraq. Battlefield surgeons removed his leg as they worked desperately to save his life.

He received a one-off payment of £50,000 for losing a lower limb, in line with Army tariffs for frontline injuries.

But by contrast, The Mail on Sunday can reveal the officer accused of firing the weapon, Captain Thomas ‘Tam’ Henderson, 48, has been awarded £500,000 in an out-of-court settlement after suing the Ministry of Defence for stress suffered following the blunder in March 2003.

Last night, Shadow Defence Minister Kevan Jones described the discrepancy between the payment as ‘an injustice’.
read more here

Monday, October 12, 2015

US and UK Lost Soldiers in Afghanistan Helicopter Crash

2 U.S. troops die in Afghanistan copter crash
USA TODAY
Alan Gomez and Gregg Zoroya
October 12, 2015

Two U.S. servicemembers were among five killed Sunday when a British helicopter crashed in Afghanistan's capital, Kabul, the third mass-casualty event involving transport aircraft in the war-torn country in three months, coalition forces in Afghanistan said Monday.

The other dead were two British servicemembers and a French civilian contractor in what the NATO-led military mission described as a "non-hostile incident." The crash involving a British Puma Mk 2 helicopter happened at 4:15 p.m. local time at Camp Resolute Support in Kabul, and an investigation is underway.

"We're deeply saddened by the loss of our teammates," said U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Wilson Shoffner, military communications chief in Afghanistan. "Our heartfelt condolences go out to the families and friends of those affected in this tragic incident and we pray for the full recovery of the injured."
read more here

Ministry of Defence names RAF personnel killed in helicopter crash in Kabul as Flight Lieutenant Geraint Roberts and Flight Lieutenant Alan Scott

Thursday, October 8, 2015

UK Veteran Battles PTSD After Sangin

‘Guilt – even innocent guilt – is an evil thing’: how soldiers struggle to cope when they come home
The Guardian
Matthew Green
October 7, 2015

Many ex-servicemen suffering from combat stress are damaged not by a traumatic event, but by the shock of returning from war. When they fall prey to insomnia, guilt, anxiety and isolation, the military, it seems, does not have all the answers
AJ did not want to leave but he knew he had no choice: the Chinooks only landed every two weeks and would be on the ground for no more than 10 seconds. As the helicopter raced across the hard-packed desert, he could not know that his hardest battle lay ahead.
The faces of the two young Afghan policemen would never leave him. They had both been shot while defending their position and bled to death in the back of a trailer as AJ and a medic tried to staunch their wounds. They could not have been more than 17 years old. AJ, as the former Royal Marine asked me to call him, was on his second deployment to Afghanistan. The first tour, in 2001, had been quiet. Five years later, his unit, 45 Commando, was engaged in fierce fighting with the Taliban outside the town of Gereshk. As a sniper, AJ acted as lookout for the other marines, carefully spotting enemy positions and either calling in mortar fire or counting down from three, according to his training, and pulling the trigger.

After the battle at Gereshk, AJ’s unit was deployed to Sangin, a small town on the Helmand river. It was a Taliban stronghold, and soldiers from the Parachute Regiment had narrowly managed to hold the town centre after intense fighting a few months before. AJ’s unit was based 4km away in an outpost known as FOB (Forward Operating Base) Robinson, where an outer ring of earth-filled wire cages formed the first line of defence. The marines bedded down in buildings in an inner circle nicknamed the Dust Bowl. A tower made of mud bricks stood in the centre and AJ took turns with the other snipers to man a makeshift bunker on the top, cradling their rifles and scanning the dun-coloured landscape for any sign of Taliban fighters.

Nowhere in Sangin was safe, but the tower was particularly exposed. FOB Robinson had been set up on a slope, giving the Taliban concealed in the town a clear aim into its interior. They exploited the site’s weakness to the full, hammering the base with 120mm mortars that made the ground shake. Sometimes as many as 30 rounds would slam into the ground in a single attack.

While other marines took cover, AJ and his sniper team would remain on the tower – searching the surrounding patchwork of terrain for any sign of the enemy. Each time he heard the crump of a mortar being fired, AJ flinched, suspended for 30 seconds, waiting. It was only when he heard an ear-splitting blast as the shell struck home that he knew he was still alive.
On his last day as a marine, AJ’s wife went to work. He got up from the kitchen table and found himself walking towards the garage door intent on ending it all. A silent voice was calling: “Everything will be easy if you come with me.”
read more here

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

UK: Millions Spent on Recovery Empty Beds?

How the British Army and Help for Heroes spent tens of millions on recovery centres for wounded soldiers where beds are empty 
Daily Mail
By MARK DUELL and LUCY CROSSLEY FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 23:54 EST, 28 September 2015
Network of centres is funded by Army with H4H and Royal British Legion
Half of bedrooms at two biggest facilities 'occupied by serving personnel', although the centres are also used by veterans
Costs allegedly went from £70m over four years to £350m over ten years
Charity founder says 'We are not running a Travelodge. These Centres are helping to rebuild lives'

Royal visit: The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry open the

Tedworth House recovery centre in May 2013
Tens of millions of pounds has been spent on recovery centres for wounded soldiers where beds have been left empty, it was claimed last night.

The network of centres is funded by the British Army, in partnership with Help for Heroes and the Royal British Legion, to support injured military personnel and veterans.

But only around half of bedrooms at the two largest facilities were reported to have been occupied by serving personnel between August 2013 and January this year.

This figure does not include mentally and physically injured veterans who also use the centres or other visitors. Many facility users only attend during the day.
Lieutenant-Colonel Jonathan Sutton, acting chief of staff on the project, told The Times that he had warned senior officers and the Ministry of Defence about what he said was the army's failure to justify how the money was being spent.

'‘The team used to joke how it was like trying to build an aeroplane while taxiing down the runway,' he said.
read more here

Monday, September 28, 2015

UK Military Uniform Is "Upsetting" At Queen Mother Hospital?

Hospital told RAF sergeant to leave waiting room in case his uniform upset other patients
THE DAILY MAIL
By JOSH WHITE
PUBLISHED:25 September 2015

Aircraft engineer Mark Prendeville at The Queen Mother Hospital in Margate
Staff moved him to sit in a corner before asking him to sit behind a wall
Family claim they were told it was as they 'didn't want to upset' anyone
Say explanation added that A and E had 'lots of cultures coming in' and staff were worried about his uniform
Mark Prendeville’s (pictured on his wedding day) treatment was condemned as ‘horrifying’ by military figures and Air Force veterans – but follows a string of incidents in recent years where service personnel were snubbed because of their uniform
An RAF sergeant who has served in Iraq and Afghanistan was moved out of a hospital waiting room because staff feared his uniform would upset people from different cultures, it was reported.

Aircraft engineer Mark Prendeville’s treatment was condemned as ‘horrifying’ by military figures and Air Force veterans – but follows a string of incidents in recent years where service personnel were snubbed because of their uniform.

Sergeant Prendeville, 38, was taken to the A and E department at Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital in Margate, Kent, after chemicals from a fire extinguisher got in to his eyes during a training exercise. He was then taken to an empty corner of the waiting room before being moved behind a corner by hospital staff, The Sun reported.

In an explanation to his family, hospital workers were said to have claimed ‘they didn’t want to upset people’ because they ‘have lots of different cultures coming in’.

Sergeant Prendeville’s father, Jim, said: ‘Mark was moved because of his uniform – he was told that twice. The words they used were: “We’ve lots of cultures coming in”.

‘Mark was quite annoyed, but he’s a quiet lad and didn’t want to cause a fuss.’

Mr Prendeville added: ‘He didn’t care about the burns, he felt worse about how he was treated. I was absolutely disgusted when I heard. I don’t know what is so offensive about a uniform.’

Veterans and military figures condemned Sergeant Prendeville’s treatment. Former Chief of the Air Staff Sir Michael Graydon described the incident as ‘disappointing’.
read more here

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Welch Iraq Veteran With PTSD Found Dead After Absence of Support

Iraq veteran tasered by police after Pwllheli pub fight dies days before a court appearance
Daily Post
BY TOM DAVIDSON
10 SEPTEMBER 2015

Geraint Llyr Jones who had PTSD had been due to be sentenced for his part in a disturbance at the Pen Cob

Ex-soldier Geraint Llyr Jones, 32, was found dead in Pwllheli
“This is an absolutely classic case of a soldier leaving the army with PTSD and receiving no support or training whatsoever on his discharge.
An ex-soldier who was tasered by police in a pub fracas has died, days before a court appearance.

The death of Geraint Llyr Jones, 32, who was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, is not being treated as suspicious.

Mr Jones, who had served with the Royal Welch Fusiliers in Iraq died at an address on Upper Ala Road in Pwllheli on Sunday.

The 32-year-old, originally from Nefyn, had pleaded guilty to charges of obstructing a police officer, common assault and criminal damage at JD Wetherspoon-run Pen Cob in June this year.

During the incident, police officers had to use a taser gun on Mr Jones so he could be apprehended.
read more here

Friday, June 26, 2015

Tourist Learns To Not Challenge Queen's Guard

News UK News
Soldiers Dramatic moment Queen's Guard soldier draws gun at show-off tourist pestering him 
Mirror UK
BY KARA O'NEILL
26 JUNE 2015

The Ministry of Defence supported the soldier's judgement and said he was 'there to protect himself, the sentry position and the Queen'
Almost immediately, the guard stops his march, pulls his weapon on the tourist and shouts: "Step back from the Queen's Guard," causing the man to swiftly back away in terror. Keeping an air of professionalism, the guard then replaces his weapon on his shoulder before continuing with his march.
This show-off tourist found out exactly why you should never pester a Queen's Guard while he's on official duty - because you might get a gun pointed in your face. In the clip, a man marches alongside the soldier as he paces up and down outside the royal residence. As he turns, a tourist in the background is heard commenting: "His gun is jammed." Unbelievably, the tourist starts marching alongside the soldier, then puts his hand on his shoulder - the same shoulder he is carrying his bayonet tipped rifle. read more here

Sunday, June 14, 2015

UK "Blunders" Exposed After Soldiers Found Hanged

Soldiers found hanged: army blunders exposed 
The Sunday Times (UK)
Mark Hookham, Defence Correspondent
Published: 14 June 2015
Darren Mitchell had fought in Afghanistan
AN INQUIRY into the suspected suicides of two Afghanistan veterans and eight further incidents of self-harm at an isolated army base in Northern Ireland has exposed a series of blunders.

Officers at Ballykinler barracks in Co Down were warned that at least one of the soldiers who died was suffering from the symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) four months before he was found hanged, a report reveals.

The army launched an inquiry following the deaths of Lance-Corporal James Ross, 30, in December 2012 and Rifleman Darren Mitchell, 20, two months later. Both men, of the 2nd Battalion the Rifles, had fought in Afghanistan. Like Mitchell, Ross was found hanged.
read more here

Thursday, June 4, 2015

UK Soldier Saved Lives Then Killed Someone Texting Behind Wheel

If you still think it is ok to use phone texting while driving, you are not thinking at all!

This Captain in the UK was a hero in Afghanistan, risking her life to save others by defusing bombs.

This same Captain decided to pick up her phone while driving a car, risking the lives of others and killed someone.
Hero soldier jailed for killing hitchhiker while using phone at the wheel
Metro.co.uk
Harry Readhead
Wednesday 3 Jun 2015

A female soldier who defused more than 60 Taliban bombs during a tour of Afghanistan has been jailed after killing a hitchhiker while texting at the wheel.

Captain Alison Dray, 31, received a Queen’s commendation for her work in the gulf and is the only female British bomb disposal expert to complete a full tour of Afghanistan.

But Captain Dray, from Rochester, Kent, was jailed for nine months for hitting and killing 32-year-old Ashley Taylor with her car while surfing the internet on her mobile phone.

Norwich Crown Court heard how Captain Dray had been using her iPhone ‘extensively’ at the wheel and had mounted the kerb and hit Mr. Taylor, killing him instantly.
read more here

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

UK Soldiers Stories of PTSD and Getting Help

PTSD: The Soldiers' Stories
The Sun Proudly Sponsors Forces TV
Simon Newton June 2, 2015
During the past year some mental health charities for ex-service personnel have recorded a sharp rise in the numbers of veterans seeking their help for post-traumatic stress disorder.

The rise in cases, with most of those being treated having served in Iraq or Afghanistan, has been described as ‘very concerning’.

Three former British soldiers, meanwhile, have told Forces TV about the devastating effects of PTSD on their lives and their battle to recover with the help of the London Veterans' Service.
watch video here

Sunday, May 10, 2015

"Longest Kill" UK Army's Record Breaking Sniper

Army's record-breaking sniper who killed two Taliban a mile and a half away driven to the brink of suicide by his chilling job 
Daily Mail UK
By TIM MACFARLAN FOR MAILONLINE
10 May 2015
Craig Harrison, 40, killed two militant assassins from range of 2,475 metres Created history with the shots in Musa Qala, Helmand Province, Afghanistan in November 2009 But Corporal of Horse Harrison, from Cheltenham, Gloucs, almost took his own life as he was haunted by dozens of victims and hunted by terrorists
Chilling: A veteran sniper told Craig: 'You make a sniper by taking a human being and re-engineering him. A sniper isn't a man any more. He is a weapon, waiting to be fired'

The British Army's record-breaking sniper who killed two Taliban a mile and a half away has revealed how he was driven to the brink of suicide by his chilling job.

Craig Harrison, 40, killed two militant assassins from a range of 2,475 metres - more than 900 metres beyond his rifle's effective range.

He created history with the shots in Musa Qala, Helmand Province, Afghanistan in November 2009, which remain the longest confirmed kills ever recorded.

But the nightmare that came with being the Army's number one marksmen almost cost Corporal of Horse Harrison his own life as he was haunted by his dozens of victims and hunted by terrorists, according to the Sun.

In his new book 'The Longest Kill', Craig, from Cheltenham, Gloucs, describes the events leading up to the record-breaking kills, and the shots themselves, in harrowing detail.

The soldiers ahead of him were ambushed when he was was part of a three-armoured-vehicle dawn patrol south of Musa Qala escorting Afghan fighters on foot.

The area was full of Taliban and for three hours Craig let rip with his Accuracy International L115A3 rifle.

He said: 'I was sweating, stripped down to a T-shirt under my body armour, even though it was a mild winter's day.
Craig developed post-traumatic stress disorder and was denied the Military Cross for his bravery.

His colonel refused it on his behalf, thinking he would not have been able to handle the pressure. Craig was 'dumbfounded' by the decision.

read more here

Thursday, April 16, 2015

UK:Almost 1,000 Personnel Required Psychiatric Treatment After Taking Lariam

Almost 1,000 members of Armed Forces require psychiatric treatment after being given anti-Malaria drug linked to mental health problems
Daily Mail
By COREY CHARLTON FOR MAILONLINE
15 April 2015

Almost 1,000 personnel required psychiatric treatment after taking drug
They were prescribed anti-malarial drug Lariam by the Ministry of Defence
The discredited product's side effects include psychosis and hallucinations
Retired Major General Alastair Duncan is currently in a psychiatric unit
He was prescribed the drug prior to a deployment in Sierra Leone

A retired major general is among 1,000 British service personnel requiring psychiatric treatment after taking an anti-malarial drug issued by the Ministry of Defence.

New figures released by the MoD show that since 2008, 994 personnel have been treated for mental health issues after having been prescribed Lariam.

Despite Lariam - the brand name for the drug mefloquine - being banned by the U.S. military due to concerns over side effects, the MoD has ignored appeals to stop prescribing it in what critics say is an escalating 'scandal'.
Major-General Alastair Duncan (pictured) is currently in a psychiatric unit after having been given the drug prior to a deployment in Sierra Leone

According to The Independent's Jonathan Owen, retired Major General Alastair Duncan is currently in a psychiatric unit following a Post Traumatic Stress Disorder episode four months ago.

Maj-Gen Duncan was given the drug Lariam before a deployment to Sierra Leone.

read more here


We did know about this, but they just stopped talking about it.

Links to medications suspected with non-combat deaths
April 27, 2004 DoD, VA to study malaria drug’s side effects Associated Press

The Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs will study the side effects of Lariam, a drug given to servicemen to prevent malaria, Pentagon spokesman Jim Turner said.

The use of Lariam came up in investigations of murders and murder-suicides involving Fort Bragg soldiers in the summer of 2002, when four soldiers were accused of killing their wives. Two of those soldiers committed suicide immediately and a third killed himself in jail.

The three soldiers who killed themselves had served in Afghanistan, where Lariam is routinely used by U.S. troops. The fourth, who is still awaiting trial, did not serve there.

A November 2002 report by the office of the Army Surgeon General said two of the four soldiers had taken Lariam, but the Army would not say which. The report said Lariam probably did not factor in the killings.

Turner said a subcommittee of the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board met two weeks ago to consider ways to study the use of Lariam among service members. A Veterans Affairs spokeswoman said the VA will review the issue but has not issued a report on the study.

Lariam, which is also known as mefloquine, is routinely prescribed to soldiers working in countries where malaria is a problem. Some people have blamed it for causing psychotic reactions, including depression, hallucinations and thoughts of suicide.

Doctor: Anti-malarial drug may be harmful
Army Times

In the past six weeks, Dr. Michael Hoffer has treated nine service members who returned from Iraq or Afghanistan unable to walk a straight line or stand still without staggering. Some said objects appeared to spin around them for more than an hour at a time.

A Navy commander and director of the Department of Defense Spatial Orientation Center at Naval Medical Center, San Diego, Hoffer believes the problems are linked to a drug called Lariam "known generically as mefloquine" that the military gives to troops to prevent malaria.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has urged the Pentagon to set a timeline for a Defense Department study, announced in March, of negative effects from Lariam and other anti-malarial drugs.


And then there were more

VA Warns Doctors About Lariam, United Press International, 25 June 2004

And even more on Wounded Times for Lariam

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

UK: Surge of Veterans Looking for Help With Combat PTSD

Veterans' PTSD cases up a quarter in a year charity warns 
The Telegraph
Ben Farmer
Defence Correspondent
March 31, 2015
Britain is seeing a "very concerning" surge in veterans looking for help with PTSD and other mental health problems after the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the charity Combat Stress warns, after it has seen its cases jump 26 percent in a year
The number of veterans seeking help for PTSD and other mental health problems has jumped more than a quarter in the past year alone with a surge of cases from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, a leading military charity has warned.

Combat Stress says it is now deals with six new veterans asking for help each day and is at its busiest in its 96-year-history.

The 26 per cent increase in the past year is more than double the rise seen the year before and is mainly due to a “marked rise” in Afghanistan and Iraq veterans coming forward.

The latest rise follows a string of annual increases and the toll of cases from the wars of the past decade will continue to increase, the charity believes. It is calling on the Government to spend more on NHS treatment for them.

Walter Busuttil, director of medical services, said: “We are very concerned at the significant rise in those coming forward with military PTSD. 
read more here

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Point Man Led Teams of Soldiers, Struggled to Heal

Soldier who struggled after suffering terrible injuries in Afghanistan roadside bomb blast found dead
Mirror UK
By Paul Britton
20 February 2015

Bradley Paul's grieving family and friends now want to raise awareness of stress and depression being faced by serving and former military personnel
Private Paul was deployed to Afghanistan with the infantry battalion in September 2012, just two months before the Improvised Explosive Device (IED) blast.

He was a ‘point man’ who led teams of soldiers with a metal detector, checking for deadly hidden devices in the ground planted by the Taliban.

The sudden detonation and subsequent explosion happened at a river crossing after Private Paul had led a team of soldiers to a base to collect supplies. No one else was injured.


Family Memories: Bradley Paul and his mum Sam doing a charity skydive

A soldier who struggled to come to terms with life after he recovered from terrible injuries he suffered in a roadside bomb blast in Afghanistan has been found dead at home.

Bradley Paul, a hugely-respected private with the 1st Battalion, The Mercian Regiment, was 23 when he died last week.

Now his grieving family and friends want to raise awareness of stress and depression being faced by serving and former military personnel.

The bomb blast in 2012 in Helmand Province severed an artery in his neck and left him with multiple bone fractures.

He was airlifted back to the UK within 48 hours and treated at a specialist military hospital in Birmingham before he was transferred to the Headley Court rehabilitation centre, where he spent more than 12 months battling back to fitness.
read more here

Monday, February 2, 2015

Royal Marine Sniper Has 173 Confirmed Kills

British Royal Marine is world's deadliest sniper 
Corporal reported to have recorded 173 confirmed kills during tours of Afghanistan and Iraq, putting him ahead of US Navy SEAL Chris Kyle featured in American Sniper film
Telegraph UK
By Danny Boyle, and Ben Farmer
02 Feb 2015
"The Royal Marines and Army refuse to identify snipers for fear they will become targets for Islamist revenge attacks"
A Royal Marine who has 173 confirmed kills fighting Taliban insurgents is the deadliest sniper in the world, it has been claimed.

The unnamed Marine’s toll of kills in Afghanistan surpasses that of Chris Kyle, the US Navy SEAL, whose exploits are portrayed in the Oscar-nominated film American Sniper.

The corporal, who is still serving, made the majority of his kills during a single six-month tour of Helmand province eight years ago. His actual total of kills could be far higher, sources told the Sun.

The identity of the sniper, who is a married father who grew up in the South of England, is a closely guarded secret for fear he will become a target for Islamist terrorists.

One source told the newspaper: "Only people inside the community know about his incredible contribution — but young recruits are in awe of him.
The records of both Kyle and the British sniper remain far from the numbers of kills credited to the most prolific Second World War marksmen.

Several Soviet snipers were credited with each killing more than 400 German soldiers.

Simo Häyhä, a Finnish soldier nicknamed White Death, was credited with 505 sniper kills during the Winter War of 1939 to 1940, when the Soviet Union invaded Finland.
read more here

Sunday, February 1, 2015

UK Memorial Service Has No Room For Parents But Enough For Politicians?

Parents of soldiers killed in Afghanistan are prevented from attending St Paul's Cathedral memorial service to make way for VIPs and politicians
Parents of fallen soldiers 'furious' they have been excluded from service
St Paul's Cathedral service will remember the 453 servicemen killed
Just 906 tickets have been dished out to wives and a 'plus one'
Jacquie McDonald, 53, said she feels parents have been 'cast aside'
Janette Binnie, whose son Sean was killed, said decision was 'humiliating'
Military chiefs, politicians, royals and veterans have been handed tickets
By JENNY AWFORD FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 14:52 EST, 1 February 2015

Sean McDonald, 26, having his last cuddle with mother Jacquie, 53, who feels parents have been 'cast aside' after not being invited to memorial service
Parents of soldiers killed in Afghanistan are 'furious' that they have been excluded from a memorial service - while politicians and VIPs are expected to pack the event. The service, set to be held at St Paul's Cathedral two days before Mothering Sunday, will remember the 453 servicemen killed and thousands injured during the 13-year conflict. But just 906 tickets have been dished out and only the spouses of fallen soldiers have been invited along with a 'plus one' leaving hundreds of grieving parents disappointed.

Jacquie McDonald, 53, from Edinburgh, who lost her son Sean, 26, in 2010 after he stepped on an improvised explosive device (IED), said she feels as though parents have been 'cast aside'.
read more here

Thursday, January 22, 2015

UK Military Prevalence of Anxiety, Depression, Plus PTSD

Anxiety and depression twice as prevalent in military - study says 
BBC
January 21, 2015
"The findings draw attention to the need for Defence Medical Services to continue to focus on identifying and treating depression and anxiety in addition to PTSD."

The high levels of stress that soldiers experience could be a factor, researchers say
Members of the UK armed forces are twice as likely to develop depression or anxiety than members of the general working population, a study suggests.

The King's College London research compared surveys from 7,000 military personnel with people in other jobs.

It found 18% of men and 25% of women in the forces reported symptoms of common mental disorders, compared with 8% of men and 12% of women in other areas.

The MoD said it had improved mental health services for the military.

The researchers said the study, published in Psychological Medicine, was fairer then previous studies which included results from unemployed people and those with long-term health problems and disabilities - who researchers said were more likely to report symptoms of mental illness.

The findings could be explained by the frequency and intensity of stressful events experienced by those in the military, researchers said.

Military life also required extended periods spent away from family and friends, they added.

The survey included questions such as whether the subject felt they were "playing a useful part in things".

Respondents from the military were almost three times more likely to disagree with this statement than those from the general population, the study found.
read more here

Thursday, December 25, 2014

British and German Troops in Afghanistan Remember WWI Christmas Truce

Soldiers in Afghanistan Play Soccer in Memory of WWI Truce
Reuters
December 24, 2014

German and British troops pose for a photo after a football match to commemorating the Christmas Truce of 1914, at the ISAF Headquarters in Kabul, Dec. 24, 2014.
KABUL— British and German soldiers gathered in a dusty field in Afghanistan on Wednesday to play a game of soccer in memory of a Christmas truce spontaneously called between their armies a century ago during World War I.

That moment in 1914 - when troops along Europe's Flanders front met after four months killing each other to sing carols, exchange gifts and play soccer in No Man's Land - is celebrated as a triumph of humanity over the savagery of war.

A hundred years later, on a military base halfway around the world, the soccer match took place between concrete blast walls in a country where Britain and Germany have spent over a decade in a coalition fighting against the Taliban insurgency.
read more here